hrothgar, on May 2 2007, 10:27 AM, said:
And I thought that your bidding theories were inane...
You are confusing two very different issues here:
Ah! But that was the point.
When someone points out that Bush said something very similar to what Nixon said, the wow factor seems to be two-fold. First, an ad hominum, non-sequitur argument (Nixon was a bad man, George said the same thing as Richard, George is a bad man, both must be wrong because both were bad men).
The second wow factor is to suggest that Iraq is simply history repeating itself, in a bad way again, without any reflection upon the intricacies of the situation.
I find it particularly amusing to make arguments how the division of Germany did not reflect specific cultural divisions. Does anyone remember that the "no fly zones" was the 1990's Clinton approach to the Iraq problem? Relatively random lines drawn straight across the country. Didn't we actually try this, sort of?
The problem has no solution that I could offer, as I know far too little about what is really going on and because I have little expertise in multi-national concerns.
That being said, it seems fairly obvious that one reality is undeniable. Iraq was held together, kept from bursting internally by internal stresses and kept from being meddled with by external forces, by a man and his followers. That man and his followers decided multiple times to cross borders, both into Iran (our idea) and into Kuwait (his idea). We eventually took him out.
However, you cannot remove a failing dam without water going everywhere, especially if people are waiting with buckets to throw more water into the mess. If the dam must go, you better have a plan for the water. If the am is already gone, there's no sense complaining about the water or pretending it is not there.
Two sides have been making arguments on this, it seems. One is standing there getting terribly wet, without many good ideas how to stop all the water, let alone the people throwing more water into the problem. The other side liked the idea of removing the dam, but they now just want to point to all the water everywhere and argue that somehow that was not expected, with no plan for stopping the flowing.
"Gibberish in, gibberish out. A trial judge, three sets of lawyers, and now three appellate judges cannot agree on what this law means. And we ask police officers, prosecutors, defense lawyers, and citizens to enforce or abide by it? The legislature continues to write unreadable statutes. Gibberish should not be enforced as law."
-P.J. Painter.